She Served Water At Her Brother’s Signing, Then Took The Firm-hihehu

My mother’s fingers dug into my arm hard enough that I knew the bruises would bloom before dinner.

“Stand in the corner, Emily,” she whispered through a smile polished for the room. “Your face ruins the energy of your brother’s signing.”

She said it like she was correcting a napkin.

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The boardroom was too cold, the kind of corporate cold that makes everyone pretend discomfort is professionalism.

It smelled like burnt coffee, lemon cleaner, and new leather chairs nobody sat in long enough to soften.

Outside the glass wall, phones rang and shoes tapped across the polished floor.

Inside, my family was preparing to celebrate a lie.

Mom steered me toward the credenza where the water pitcher waited, sweating onto a folded white napkin.

“Pour properly,” she hissed. “Servitude is all you’ve ever been good at.”

I held the pitcher with both hands.

It was heavier than it looked.

So was silence, but I had been carrying that longer.

My father, Arthur Harris, sat at the head of the mahogany table in a navy suit, tapping one finger against a folder marked PARTNERSHIP TRANSFER.

My mother sat slightly behind him, sharp and elegant in cream, playing the devoted wife while watching every person in the room for signs of respect.

Julian sat across from them with his legs stretched out, smiling like a man who had confused being rescued with being brilliant.

“I’m the new partner,” he announced, lifting a paper coffee cup like champagne. “Finally, someone in this family knows how to think big.”

Dad smiled.

Mom laughed.

I poured water.

For most of my life, that had been our family structure.

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